10/10/16

The Queen of Blood, by Sarah Beth Durst

I'm as confident as can be that if I were to make a list of my five favorite books of the year in December, The Queen of Blood, by Sarah Beth Durst (September 2016), would be right up there.  I haven't enjoyed a fantasy book this much for ages, and if your taste in books is at all similar to mine, I'm willing to bet you will love it too!

Daleina's world is one in which elemental spirits are both necessary for life and growth, and an ever present danger.  The spirits are wild and savage, both creators and killers.  Only the power of the Queen of Renthia keeps the balance in check, though other women, from hedge witches making charms to the Queen's heirs, trained in the mastery of spirits, have a measure of power that allows them to bend the spirits to their will.  When Dalenia is still a child, her village is attacked by spirits, which the Queen should not have allowed to happen.  Dalenia finds the power in herself to keep her own family safe, but around them all the other villagers are slaughtered horribly.  She is determined to gain more power and knowledge, so that she can keep her family safe, and save others from the fate from which she hadn't been able to save her friends and neighbors.

Though her power is far from strong, she is accepted (barely) at an academy for the honing of talent, a place where possible heirs to the Queen are trained.  Though she does well on the academic side of things, all the girls around her are much better at coercing the spirits to obey them.  And Dalenia becomes pretty sure that she doesn't have what it takes to be an heir.  But then Ven, the disgraced former champion of the Queen, chooses her to be his protégée.  He doesn't see her lack of raw power, but instead appreciates her strength of will, her intelligence, and her ability to think outside the box.  Travelling with Ven from village to village, where bloody attacks are continuing, she grows more confident in her ability to direct the elemental spirits, and she is accepted as one of the pool of fifty heirs, from whom the next queen will be chosen by the spirits. 

When at last the reasons why the Queen is not stopping these attacks becomes revealed, a new Queen is needed.   Dalenia, still full of doubt, takes her place with the other heirs...and, just saying, this isn't called The Queen of Blood for nothing.

So if you like rich world building of magical complexity with a constant knife edge between mortal peril and wonder, a dash of political intrigue, and fantasy school stories (my favorite part of the book was the Academy--I like boarding school stories lots), do look for this one!  It is also one of the more sex-positive books I've read in a while.  In a minor episode, Dalenia and a young man with whom she is friendly but not In Love decide to have sex for mutual enjoyment and comfort; they continue to be friendly.  She goes on to have a more romantic, but still not Star Spangled Love of Destiny with another very nice young man, but since she's caught up in life-threatening danger most of the time they are together, there's not much page time for their romance to be at the top of her mind.  There's also a reference to birth control, which you don't see much of in fantasy.

Though this is marketed as an adult book, it seems to me that it would also be a great one to offer to a young teen.  The plot is essentially a child growing up, and coming to believe in herself (although Dalenia is always aware of her lack of raw power); it is a very encouraging sort of story for those who measure themselves against others and feel they are wanting.  And really it felt like a book I'd give an older middle school kid who was looking for something un-childish to read, because the focus of the plot on the skills to be acquired and the dangers to be overcome is very much a middle-grade sort of story, as opposed to Young Adult books, in which the identity of the main character is often centered around romance.  I also think a nice dose of mutually consensual sex is a healthy thing to offer young readers starting to think about things.  Thanks to The Hunger Games, gory violence isn't really anything young readers aren't familiar with, so the fact that there's a lot of that here isn't much of an issue.  Although some of the horrible things are really horrible....

But back to The Queen of Blood.  It  is a very good read, that made me late for work. It makes tremendously vivid pictures in the mind, and though I'll be re-reading it, I don't really need to, because it is all so beautifully clear.  It is a stand-alone book, but since it's billed as "Book 1 of the Queen's of Renthia," there should be more.  And there is lots more I want--I want to explore the tension of the relationship between humans and spirits.  I want to know more about the tensions with neighboring kingdoms.  And I want to know what happens to one of Dalenia's classmates, a strong character who sets off on her own path whose story isn't resolved.  And of course I want to be sure that Dalenia survives....

Here's the Kirkus review, which goes into some of the plot points in more detail, but which basically agrees with me that this is a good book!

disclaimer: review copy received from the author


10/9/16

this week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy (10/9/2016)

Here's what I found in this week's blog reading; pleaes let me know I missed your post!

It's Cybils Award nomination time--anyone can nominate their favorite books in a wide variety of categoires, including Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction!  There are still lots of great books that haven't been nominated (Brandy has a list here; Wrinkled Crown has been nominated since she posted it but the others are still up for grabs!).  I've put asterisks next to the un-nominated books reviewed this week that are eligible (first published between Oct 16 2015 and Oct 15 2016, widely available in the US). Here's where you go to nominate.

The Reviews

Beautiful Blue World, by Suzanne LaFleur, at Ex Libris

*Behind the Canvas, by Alexander Vance, at Semicolon

*The Bronze Key, by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare, at Hidden in Pages (audiobook review)

*A Clatter of Jars, by Lisa Graff, at Semicolon

Crash Landing, by Zac Harrison at Got My Book (audiobook review)

Elliot and the Goblin Wars, by Jennifer Nielsen, at Book Dreaming

*The Evil Wizard Smallbone, by Delia Sherman, at Emerald City Book Review

The Firefly Code, by Megan Frazer Blakemore, at Puss Reboots

*Five Children on the Western Front, by Kate Saunders, at Semicolon

Furthermore, by Tahereh Mafi, at Semicolon

Fuzzy Mud, by Louis Sachar, at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow

*The Gathering (Shadow House #1), by Dan Poblocki, at Mom Read It

*Gears of Revolution, by J. Scott Savage, at Always in the Middle

The Halloweeds, by Veronica Cossanteli, at So Many Books, So Little Time

*Hercufleas, by Sam Gayton, at BooksForKidsBlog

House of Many Ways, by Diana Wynne Jones, at Leaf's Reviews

The Inquisitor's Tale, by Adam Gidwitz, at Middle Grade Mafioso

*The Last Monster, by Ginger Garrett, at Puss Reboots

*A Little Taste of Poison, by R.J. Anderson, at The Book Wars and Random Musings of a Bibliphile

The Littlest Bigfoot, by Jennifer Weiner, at Ex Libris

*The Lost Compass, by Joel Ross, at Bibliobrit

*The Peculiar Night of the Blue Heart, by Lauren DeStefano, at Charlotte's Library

The Secrets of Hexbridge Castle, by Gabrielle Kent, at Charlotte's Library

The Seventh Wish, by Kate Messner, at Susan Uhlig

*Shadow Magic, by Joshua Khan, at Bart's Bookshelf

Sophie Quire and the Last Storyguard, by Jonathan Auxier, at Puss Reboots

Star Wars: The Weapon of a Jedi, by Jason Fry, at Boys Rule, Boys Read

*Strange Star, by Emma Carroll, at The Book Smugglers

*Time Traveling with a Hamster, by Ross Weldord, at My Brain on Books

The Wolves of Whilloughby Chase, by Joan Aiken, at By Singing Light

Two hamster books at Ms. Yingling Reads--*Time Traveling with a Hamster, by Ross Weldord, and *Hamstersaurus Rex, by Tom O'Donnell

When the Sea Turned to Silver, by Grace Lin, at Great Kid Gooks 

The Wolves of Whilloughby Chase, by Joan Aiken, at By Singing Light

Authors and Interviews

Bridget Hodder (The Rat Prince) at Cynsations

Inbali Iserles (*Foxcraft: The Elders) at Bart's Bookshelf

Tania Unsworth (*Brightwood) at From the Mixed Up Files (giveaway)

Adam Gidwitz (The Inquisitor's Apprentice) at The New Yorker, talking about what makes a good book for kids

Other Good Stuff

J..K. Rowling Reveals the History Behind the Magical Congress of the United States of America at Tor

Thirteen sacry stories for MG readers at Book Riot

Don't forget to swing by Wichita next weekend for Kidlitcon!  We've just squeezed in a new panel on Series Fiction with fabulous authors Jen Swann Downey, C. Alexander London, and Lisa Harkrader!  We have also added cake.

10/7/16

The Peculiar Night of the Blue Heart, by Lauren DeStefano

If you like orphans and ghosts, and creepy mysteries, The Peculiar Night of the Blue Heart, by Lauren DeStefano (Bloomsbury, middle grade, Sept 13, 2016) is a book for you!

Marybeth and Lionel are best friends, even though they are completely different.  Both are orphans, looked after in the crowded home of Mrs. Mannerd, but Lionel is a wild boy, who thinks of himself as a feral creature, and who acts like one.  Marybeth is the opposite; she is reliable, conscientious, well-mannered, and well-groomed.  Then Lionel, prowling outdoors as is his wont, sees a strange  creature of blue light, and the blue whatever-it-is takes possession of Marybeth. 

Sometimes Marybeth can hold on to her self, but sometimes the fear and anger of the blue creature overcomes her control.  Her eyes change color, and she acts even more wild than Lionel.  Lionel can't help Marybeth control the creature.  But in order to help his friend, who Mrs. Mannerd thinks is loosing her mind, Lionel must do something even harder, and act as though he is a human child, so that he and Marybeth can stay together long enough to find a way to save her before she is sent away.

And this means solving a decades old, horribly sad mystery, that can only be done if the blue creature will cooperate....

Lionel's own story is a sad one too; he has good reasons for not wanting to be a human child, and the tension of his situation adds great poignancy to the story.  Mrs. Mannerd too is revealed to be not just a stereotypical runner-of-foster-home, but someone with whom the reader can sympathize.  And Marybeth is loveable, and it is tense as all get out to see her struggle with the blue creature. 

Things move along swiftly, with lots of supernatural suspense, in a tight package of just over 208 pages.  The relatively short length, and the relatable characters, make this a good one for young readers who want ghost stories that pull at the heartstrings.  I myself read it with much enjoyment in a single sitting.

Note of caution-- the ultimate answer to the mystery involves murder and the strong implication of sexual violence, but it is not explicitly stated and younger readers will probably not grasp all that is hinted at.  Likewise, it becomes clear that Lionel's birth family were abusive and neglectful, but again the details aren't spelled out.

review copy received from the publisher

(The Peculiar Night of the Blue Heart is eligible for the 2016 Cybils Awards in Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction, and has not yet been nominated....so if you love it, feel free to throw its hat into the ring--more information on how to do so here)




10/4/16

The Secrets of Hexbridge Castle, by Gabrielle Kent, for Timeslip Tuesday

The Secrets of Hexbridge Castle, by Gabrielle Kent (Scholastic, October 25 2016), is one I very much want to send back in time to eight-year old me.  That me was an avid reader of fantasy, and I loved the stories where magic intruded into the tedium of everyday life and exploded it.  That's the sort of story this one is, and it has the added benefit of having time travel bits, although not so much as to say that this is a Time Travel story. 

Alfie's life is horribly mundane and not much fun; his mom is dead, and he lives in a basement apartment with his loving but not the best at parenting father (the sort of father who's always tinkering with inventions, and can't cook).  And Alfie isn't looking forward to the summer stretching ahead with his one good friend, Amy, away for most of it.  But just a few pages into the story, the tedium ends abruptly when Alfie slips through time to escape some bullies.  And that's the start of his introduction to magic, setting in motion the steps in plan begun centuries earlier.

Alfie learns, from a shapeshifting raven lawyer, that  he's inherited Hexbridge Castle, and that he and his father must live in it.  Not that they are reluctant to leave their basement, especially when the Castle comes with enough funds to keep it up, and lots of (quirky) renovations in place, and a butler with divine cooking skills.  Alfie and his cousins have a grand time exploring the vast and wonderful place, and it really is almost too good to be true. 

There's something of a catch, though, as there so often is.  Alfie's parents inadvertently travelled back in time the day his was born, allowing the last of the druids to imbue Alfie with his magic.  And now Alfie has lots to learn.  Magic is more than just flying off to London on a talking polar bear rug.  Because where there is great magic, there are greedy ones who want to take it for themselves.

The greedy ones here are sufficiently well developed in their nastiness that they counter the almost cotton-candy (delightfully tasty in moderation, not so much by the time you've eaten the whole thing) wonder of the castle, and as Alfie and his cousins begin to unravel the truth of what's been terrorizing the farms around the castle, things become very exciting reading indeed (and another, somewhat more substantial, time travel episode takes place too; just to make it clear this is a valid Timeslip Tuesday book).  Attentive blog readers will note that I have tagged the post with "dragons."  There are reasons for this, that I don't to spoil, but if you like dragons, there's that bit of incentive for you.

Some of the situations are scary, but they aren't Scary scary.  Just enough to be exciting.  So you can comfortably give this one to an 8 or 9 year old who wants nice juicy fantasy fun and for whom magical castles are the be all and end all.  And then you can give them Edward Eager, and then E. Nesbit. 

Extra points from me for the Enigmatic Butler with mysterious powers and a mysterious past, who I don't think child me would have appreciate as much as adult me does!

Extra points also for not making the magic easy; instead, its seductive lure give Archie convincing pause.

This came out last summer in the UK as Alfie Bloom and the Secrets of Hexbridge Castle, and the sequel, Alfie Bloom and the Talisman Thief, came out there this June.  But the first book stands just fine on its own, so don't worry on that score!

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher



10/2/16

No roundup today; but have some Cybils recommendations




Life was too much for me this week, and for the first time since I started doing these round-up (years and years ago) I just can't today.

But, it is Cybils nomination time.  And I always worry about the books published long ago last fall....they aren't 2016 books, so they might end up overlooked.  So here are some that I think deserve to be in contention from last fall. (Although I myself am in two minds about whether The Lightning Queen belongs in speculative fiction or not.....it is magical, but is it magic?  But in any event, it is certainly deserving of nomination!)

And I do have on link for you; Brandy, a co-panelist in elemetrary/middle grade spec fic, has made a nice list of other books that haven't been nominated yet....



9/28/16

Mighty Jack, by Ben Hatke--review and favorite fairy tale blog tour


The moment Mighty Jack, Ben Hatke's newest graphic novel for kids (First Second Sept 2016), arrived in our home, it was being read. Mighty Jack is a reimagining of the story of Jack and the Beanstalk, but this is only the first episode, and my boys and I all agreed that we had only one problem with it--it ended, and we wanted more of the story Right Now!


Jack's mom is working two jobs so that they can keep their house, which means Jack (reluctantly) has to spend his summer looking after his little sister Maddy, who seems to be on the autism spectrum. The magical part of the story starts with the two kids wandering through a flea market.  A strange man offers them a box of strange seeds in exchange for the keys to their mom's car (a nice modern substitution for the cow!), and when Maddy, who doesn't talk, tells Jack to buy the seeds, he hands the keys over.  And Maddy and Jack plant them, and they begin to grow....

And they are magic, and very very dangerous plants result- mud-slinging root vegetable critters, a giant snail, and more!   Fortunately a new friend, Lily, comes to join in the fight; a homeschooled girl with excellent sword skills.  But when Maddy's seriously injured (in the fight against the giant snail), Jack decides the garden has got to go, and sets it alight, and it burns just fine.  But then Jack finds that both Lily and his sister still have seeds, and things get even worse, setting up more adventures to come (because after all the story of Jack and the Beanstalk doesn't all take place in the garden at home.....).

It is a fast, fast read, that goes down like an ice cold coke on a hot day.  Lots of fizzy bubbles of picture and story, combining to make something truly magical.  The magic (which includes a visiting dragon!) and the engaging illustrations aren't all Mighty Jack offers.  It's a warm, heart-tugging story of a family struggling to get through, with the bonds of friendship and family holding things together.  The expressive illustrations convey tons of feeling, and I look forward to paying more attention to them on my next re-readings of the book (I'm a graphic novel gulper, which means I have to go back several times to take the time to actually look at the pictures in detail.....)

Fans of Ben Hatke's previous books will be tremendously tickled to see familiar characters making cameo appearances (look for the girl from Little Robot shopping for parts and tools in the flea market, for instance).  And readers new to Hatke's stories will almost certainly want to seek out his other books. 

Fans of fairy tale retellings will also be tickled by this one, and to celebrate the release of Mighty Jack, First Second has organized a blog tour of fairy tale favorites.

I'm a big fan of fairy tale retellings (I have a list of the one's I've reviewed here).  My own personal favorite fairy tale retelling is Robin McKinley's Beauty, which has everything a romantic young reader could want--lots of books, a castle, beautiful dresses, a lovely garden, and a romance that grows from a solid foundation of friendship.   But for those who loved Might Jack, I'd recommend Ursula Vernon's fairy tale based stories about Harriet, a hamster princess who takes no prisoners. 

These aren't graphic novels, but they are graphic heavy, and so appeal to the text reluctant reader in much the same way as a graphic novel does, and they are funny and cute as all get out! The first book, Harriet the Invincible, is a Sleeping Beauty reimagining, and in the second, Of Mice and Magic, Harriet tackles the mystery of the twelve dancing princesses.  I recommend them almost as enthusiastically as I recommend Ben Hatke's books (which is saying a lot).

Be sure to check out the other stops on the tour:

     Miss Print, 9/26
  • Teen Lit Rocks, 9/27
  • Kid Lit Frenzy, 9/29
  • Librarians’ Quest, 9/30
  • YA Bibliophile, 10/3
  • Ex Libris Kate, 10/4
  • The Book Rat, 10/5
  • Love Is Not a Triangle, 10/6
  • The Reading Nook, 10/7

  • and thanks, First Second, for the review copy of Mighty Jack!

    9/27/16

    Up the Pier, by Helen Cresswell, for Timeslip Tuesday

    Helen Cresswell was an English writer of over 100 books for young readers, perhaps best know for her series about the Bagthorpe family.  She also wrote a few timeslip books, that are rather magical in an understated way, and which are heavily atmospheric and rather haunting, though not my personal favorites.

    In Up the Pier (1971), Carrie and her mother are staying in a Welsh seaside resort town, but it is off-season, and chilly, and wet, and lonely.  Her father is off for work reasons, and the family is between permeant homes, so everything feels off kilter to Carrie.  But then on the pier (the British sort of seaside pier that's kind of like a boardwalk but sticking out into the water rather than alongside it, with boardwalky sorts of amusements and games on it, but in this case, shut down because summer is over) she strikes up a friendship with a boy whose life is even more off kilter.  He and his parents and grandfather have slipped forward from the early twentieth century past...and his grandfather, an magician of sorts, things that he must have worked the magic that did it.  But he can't figure out how to send them back.

    And the ticket taker of the pier, a grumpy old man, who's from an old pier family himself, and has no family, is rather too glad to have the company trapped there on his pier...

    The family struggles to make a home for themselves in one of the empty buildings, and Carrie helps with shopping, and enjoys the company herself, but at last it becomes to clear to her why they came to be in her time, and how to send them back again.

    Yes its magical, but its somewhat dampened by the fact that the atmosphere is a chilly deserted waterfront; every day seems gray.   Still memorable and fascinating; the magic is real, and the setting feels awfully real too.  If you are a time travel fan, it's one to look for.  The ways Carrie helps the family adjust (to a point) was my favorite part.  Like other time slip books by Cresswell, I felt it was too brief (it's only 144 pages) and the main tension of the story was external to Carrie, so not quite as emotionally absorbing as I would have liked.  She herself is never at a pivot point of suspense, except when it comes to sending the family back, so it ended up being a bit of a shrug read for me. 


    9/25/16

    This week's round up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction (9/25/16)

    I will be SO GLAD when September is over, and I will have either met my Horrible Deadline for a work-related project, or gotten so close that it will be but the work of minutes to finish it.  Once it is done, my house will be clean, the garden will be tidy, and all the books will be read and reviewed!  But in the meantime...stress.  So I have little to contribute to this week's round-up, and if I missed your post, please let me know!

    The Reviews

    Alcatraz vs. the Evil Librarians, by Brandon Sanderson, at A Fantastical Librarian

    The Boy At The End of the World, by Greg van Eekhout, at Dead Houseplants

    The Bronze Key, by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare, at Jen Robinson's Book Page and Got My Book

    The Changelings, by Christina Soontrnvat, at Nerdy Book Club

    Cogheart by Peter Bunzl, at The Book Zone (For Boys)

    The Creeping Shadow, by Jonathan Stroud, at The Zen Leaf (audiobook review) and Sonderbooks

    Dark Days, by James Ponti, at Puss Reboots

    The Dark Talent, by Brandon Sanderson, at A Fantastical Librarian and Nerdophiles

    The Doll People Set Sail, by Ann M. Martin and Laura Godwin, at Leaf's Reviews

    Eden's Escape, by M. Tara Crowl, at Cracking the Cover and Charlotte's Library

    Eden's Wish, by M. Tara Crowl, at The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia

    Gears of Revolution, by J. Scott Savage, at The Write Path and Ms. Yingling Reads

    Johnny and the Dead, by Terry Pratchett, at Views from the Tesseract

    The Knights of Crystallia, by Brandon Sanderson, at A Fantastical Librarian and Becky's Book Reviews

    Masterminds, by Gordon Korman, at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow

    The Ominous Eye (Nocturnals Book 2), by Tracey Hecht, at Always in the Middle

    The Peculiar Night of the Blue Heart, by Lauren DeStefano, at The Quite Concert

    Peter Nimble and His Fantastic Eyes, by Jonathan Auxier, at Say What?

    Red, by Liesl Shurtliff, at Semicolon

    Sandry's Book, by Tamora Pierce, at Got My Book (audiobook review)

    The Scourge, by Jennifer A. Nielsen, at On Starships and Dragonwings

    The Secret Keepers, by Trenton Lee Stewart, at Book Nut

    The Seventh Wish, by Kate Messner, at Children's Books Heal

    The Shattered Lens, by Brandon Sanderson, at A Fantastical Librarian and Becky's Book Reviews

    Unusual Chickens for the Exceptional Poultry Farmer, by Kelly Jones, at Not Acting My Age

    Two at Faith, Fiction, Friends-- Roverandom, by J.R.R. Tolkien, and The Stone of Destiny, by Jim Ware


    Authors and Interviews

    Alexandra Ott, (Rules for Thieves) at Melissa Roske

    Other Good Stuff

    The judges for this year's Cybils Awards have been announced--here's the stalwart Elementary/Middle Grade Spec. Fic. crew!  If you are kind of wishing you were part of it too, please consider applying next year!  I always love to see new folks apply, and really, it's not that much more reading than you'd be doing anyway....

    And speaking of which, nominations open October 1, so do send us EMG SF panelists lots of good books to read! Books need to have been published between Oct. 16, 2015 and October 15, 2016.  I'll have more info. on the day.

















    9/21/16

    Ripley's Believe It or Not--Unlock the Weird!


    As a child, the Ripley's Believe It or Not part of the Sunday funnies was always a favorite, and now I'm a grown-up, I still say yes very happily indeed when offered the latest new Ripley's book--Unlock the Weird!-- to review!  Although it's kind of hard to "review" a Ripley's book...they are all so full of so many different, strange, eye-opening, and educational tidbits and pictures that you can't evaluate them all.  One can chose favorite things (like a Darth Vader helmet carved by a Tahitian artist in the style of a ceremonial skull to demonstrate the intersections of the modern world and indigenous cultures), and one can find things that don't seem all that interesting (it's a matter of personal taste; I, for instance, am not that stirred by someone having a list of 20 Washington Redskins players tattooed on their back).

    But Unlock the Weird! like all the Ripley books, offers great browsing fun...it's like a really cool facebook feed in paper form, and so these are great books to offer kids who like to learn neat stuff but don't think they like to read books!

    So this is more of a "heads up, it's here" post than a review, but I can say with confidence that this one is another fine addition to the Ripley's shelf, and I enjoyed it lots.

    9/19/16

    Eden's Escape, by M. Tara Crowl (Blog Tour review!)

    Last year I saw a fair number of reviews of Eden's Wish, by M. Tara Crowl, the story of a young genie desperately wanting to leave her lamp and live in the sun of the real world.  I wanted to read it, but never quite had the time.  So when I was asked to be a stop on the blog tour for its sequel, Eden's Escape, I was very pleased, and sat down happily to read.....

    Eden is the newest member of an ancient line of genies, each raised in the comfort of the magical lamp by its two guardians, who care for her with attention, baked goods, and a rigorous education.  Eden will be the genie of the lamp till she's granted 999 wishes on earth, and then she'll be free to make a wish for herself, and live whatever life she wants.  It will take years, because the lamp isn't easy for humans to find.  And so Eden's visits to the real world are brief and infrequent, and it's driving her mad.  So when she discovers a way to leave the lamp without it being found and rubbed, she does....and finds herself in California, totally unprepared for real life.  Fortunately, a brother and sister taker her under their wings, and to their middle school....less fortunately, a nasty cabal of ex-genies want her and the lamp to fuel their dreams of power.  Their plan would doom the lamps two guardians, and Eden, though she was happy to escape, can't allow that....

    It all works out well in the end, leading to an adjustment in Eden's life.  Instead of living in the lamp, she'll live in New York, with a lovely ex-genie.  And this is where Eden's Escape (Disney-Hyperion, Sept. 6) begins, with a whirlwind tour of New York as seen through the eyes of a sheltered genie.  But Eden can't enjoy her new life for long.  She's kidnapped by a powerful and eccentric tech genius millionaire, who, like the bad guys in book 1, wants to use her and the lamp for his own purposes.  She escapes the lab where she taken, and finds that she's in Paris, with no money, passport, cell phone...or magical lamp.  Once again a local girl (a rebellious fashionista) looks after her...but to add to her problems, the same bad genie cabal find she's in Paris, and they plot to capture her themselves. 

    The momentum builds and builds as old enemies must work together to save the lamp, and it becomes a true page turner! 

    Although much is made of how beautiful the genies are (and there is diversity among them, which is good, though their names were not all historically accurate, which grated on my pedantic little eyes*), they are also formidably intelligent, and although Eden hasn't had enough real world experience to be a true Nancy Drew type character, she's smart enough to listen and pay attention and use what she's learned to good effect.  And to use oxygen tanks to good effect to, during her escape from the Paris lab.  What makes her most likeable is the wonder and joy she takes in the world and all that we take for granted--seeing San Diego, New York, and Paris through her fresh eyes is a treat!

    These are great books for a ten or eleven year old--the dangers are vivid and gripping, the young characters relatable and interesting, and the various permutations of genie magic add enchantment.  Older, more cynical, readers might not be able to swallow the lucky chances that make Eden's path easier than it might have been, but younger ones will be happy to go along with the ride. 

    *I just can't believe a Bambi from the 19th century.  Unless it's a male deer.

    disclaimer:  review copies received from the author

    9/18/16

    This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (9/18/16)


    Here's this week's gleanings from my blog reading....please let me know if I missed your post!  I only got one review written this week....I will be so so so glad when September is over and the three deadlines (mostly work related) hanging over my head have come and gone, and I can read all the books that have come in the past two weeks with a carefree heart....

    The Reviews

    Artemis Fowl, by Eoin Colfer, at Lunar Rainbows

    The Borrowers, by Mary Norton, at Becky's Book Review

    The Candymakers, by Wendy Mass, at Redeemed Reader

    The Candymakers and the Chocolate Chase, by Wendy Mass, at Redeemed Reader

    Catlantis, by Anna Starobinets, at Kid Lit Reviews

    Dealing With Dragons, by Patricia C. Wrede, at Bookish Ambition

    Eden's Wish by M. Tara Crowl, at Read Till Dawn

    Everblaze, by Shannon Messenger, at Kitty Cat at the Library

    The Evil Wizard Smallbone, by Delia Sherman, at Charlotte's Library

    Gabriel Finley and the Raven's Riddle, by George Hagen, at A Backwards Story

    Gears of Revolution: Mysteries of Cove#2 by J. Scott Savage, at Log Cabin Library

    The Hidden Oracle, by Rick Riordan, at Snuggly Oranges

    Hoodoo, by Ronald L. Smith, at Reading While White

    The Inquisitor’s Tale, by Adam Gidwitz, at Waking Brain Cells

    Joshua and the Arrow Realm, by Donna Galanti, at This Kid Reviews Books

    The Littlest Bigfoot, by Jennifer Weiner, at The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia

    Lug: Blast From the North, by David Zeltser, at My Brain on Books

    The Magician's Elephant, by Kate DeCamillo, at Faith, Fiction, Friends

    The Red Sun, by Alane Adams, at Say What?

    Serafina and the Twisted Staff, by Robert Beatty, at Ex Libris and Sharon the Librarian

    The Scourge, by Jennifer A. Nielsen, at Bibliobrit

    The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud, at JustinTalksBooks

    The Shattered Lens (Alcatraz vs the Evil Librarians) by Brandon Sanderson, at Nerdophiles and Skye's Scribblings

    "Who Could That Be at This Hour?” by Lemony Snicket, at Leaf's Reviews

    Authors and Interviews

    Ammi Joan Paquette talks about sequels at Nerdy Book Club

    Bruce Hale (The Curse of the Were-Hyena) at The Book Monsters

    James Riley (The Story Thieves) at Publishers Weekly

    Giveaways

    Eden's Wish and Eden's Escape by M. Tara Crowl, at Geo Librarian and Read Till Dawn

    The Curse of the Were-Hyena, by Bruce Hale, at The Book Monsters

    Other Good Stuff

    Ben Hatke's Zita the Spacegirl is Coming to the Movies! via Tor

    And more movie news from Tor--Storm Reid has been cast as Meg in the new Disney version of A Wrinkle in Time.

    Tea Dragons getting a graphic story that looks just lovely (also via Tor)

    Rick Riordan has a new imprint of mythological fantasy at Disney (via Publishers Weekly)

    A graphic created by David Huyck showing diversity in children's books in 2015 (read more at Picture This)


    9/15/16

    The Evil Wizard Smallbone, by Delia Sherman

    If you are a fan of Diana Wynne Jones, hasten to get your hands on The Evil Wizard Smallbone, by Delia Sherman (Candlewick, September 13, 2016)!  Do likewise if in general you enjoy stories of boys apprenticed to eccentric (evil?) wizards, surreptitiously learning more than they are being taught, and having to face an enemy far above their pay grade,

    12 year old Nick has run away from his uncle's home.  He had planned to do this, but the moment came sooner than he'd thought it would, and he's left wandering around in the middle of a Maine blizzard.  Chance takes him to the home of the Evil Wizard Smallbone, who takes him in (and turns him into a spider almost immediately).  When he's a boy again, Nick finds that he's Smallbone's minion, cooking and looking after the animals.  Smallbone appears to have no interest in teaching him magic, and in fact Nick lied and said he couldn't read.

    But Smallbone's home is a bookstore (Evil Wizard Books), and the books know that Nick can read just fine, and so when he's ready, they give him just the right books that awaken his own gifts of magic (and teach him useful life skills, like focus and perseverance, and also forcing him to do a lot of thinking about who he himself really is).  And it's a darn good thing the bookstore does this, because the Smallbone's enemies, lead by the formidable ancient werewolf Fidelou, are pressing hard against the magical boundaries of the town (and a very peculiar town it is) that Smallbone is sworn to protect.  The boundaries are weakening, Smallbone isn't getting any younger, and finally Nick must throw the weight of his own magic into Smallbone's camp, even though Smallborn is, of course, an  evil wizard.....

    Or perhaps not that evil?  This is one of the most interesting things about the book--Smallbone does some questionable things to Nick, and in the past has done some truly awful things, but he's rather likeable, even though he's basically keeping Nick hostage as a minion.....So it's nicely twisty that way.

    But what is really really really fun is to see the bookstore teaching Nick magic.  The books talk back to him (in text), and it is tremendously entertaining!  The premise of the whole thing is also very enjoyable, and there are good supporting characters to round things off. 

    Highly recommend to not just DWJ fans but to anyone who likes the same sort of books I do! 

    and now I get to check to see if Kirkus agrees with me....

    "Though Fidelou and his crew of biker werewolf minions add some dramatic distraction, it is Nick’s evolution into a young wizard that commands attention. Readers journey with Nick as he stumbles through what was real in his world, his grief at losing his mother, into a magical world that gives him a sense of purpose.
    Fans of fantasy will be captivated—and hoping for a sequel."

    So yes.  There you go.  Although I don't think this actually Needs a sequel, because it ends beautifully with an Ending, and is a standalone story.  And the things that make this one so much fun (the snarky books and the ambiguioty of Smallbone) are done, so I'm not sure I'd like the sequel as much.   But I do know for sure that I want more MG fantasy from Delia Sherman!

    disclaimer: review copy received with conviction at ALA and I have been saving it for months even though I really wanted to read it immediately and it was a great distraction during a stressful week.

    9/11/16

    This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (9/11/16)


    Here's what I found this week; please let me know if I missed your post!

    First--applications to be a panelist for the Cybils Awards are due Sept. 14--do consider applying!  There are more categories than Elementary/MG Spec Fic.--maybe audiobooks are your thing, or maybe you have a six year old at home and want to read all the chapter books of the past year!  Or maybe you've spent the year deep in YA spec fic--they always need good panelists who aren't afraied of a bit of reading...

    The Reviews

    Bounce, by Megan Shull, at Ms. Yingling Reads

    The Bronze Key, by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare, at Charlotte's Library

    Children of Exile, by Margaret Peterson Haddix, at Read Till Dawn

    Curse of the Boggin, by DJ MacHale, at Word Spelunking, Mother Daughter Book Reviews, and books4yourkids.com

    The Evil Wizard Smallbone, by Delia Sherman, at Kit Lit Reviews

    Furthermore, by Tahereh Mafi, at Cracking the Cover, Green Bean Teen Queen, and Owl Always Be Reading

    The Gathering, by Dan Poblocki, at Geo Librarian

    The Girl Who Drank the Moon, by Kelly Barnhill, at Waking Brain Cells

    Into the Land of the Unicorns, by Bruce Coville, at Got My Book

    The Legend of Sam Miracle, by N.D. Wilson, at Pages Unbound Reviews

    The Left-Handed Fate, by Kate Milford, at the NY Times

    The Looking Glass Wars, by Frank Beddor , at A Backwards Story

    Magic Marks the Spot, by Caroline Carlson, at The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia

    The Mighty Odds by Amy Ignatow, at Books4yourkids.com

    Monstrous, by MarcyKate Connolly, at Pages Unbound Reviews

    The Peculiar Night of the Blue Heart, by Lauren DeStefano, at A Reader of Fictions

    Riverkeep, by Martin Steward, at the NY Times Book Review (anyone read this yet?  Do you think its Middle Grade?)

    The Runaway Dolls, by Ann Martin and Laura Godwin, at Leaf's Reviews

    Song of the deep, by Brian Hastings, at Jean Little Library

    Unidentified Suburban Object, by Mike Jung, at Sonderbooks

    The Voyage to Magical North, by Claire Fayers, at Redeemed Reader

    When the Sea Turned to Silver, by Grace Lin, at Hit or Miss Books

    Wings of Fire (series), by Tui T. Sutherland, at Rachel Neumier

    Authors and Interviews

    Jennifer Weiner (The Littlest Bigfoot) at Publishers Weekly

    Giveaways

    Furthermore, by Tahereh Mafi, at Dark Fairie Tales

    Alcatraz vs. The Evil Librarians: The Dark Talent, by Brandon Sanderson, at Fantasy Book Critic and On Starships and Dragonwings

    The Hammer of Thor, by Rick Riordan, at Mother Daughter Book Reviews

    Other Good Stuff

    A Tuesday Ten of Speculative Fiction Girls at Views from the Tesseract

    A list of middle grade fantasy with black girl leads, at Book Riot

    At the Barnes and Noble Kids Blog, I have a list of animal fantasies for Warriors fans

    This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (9/11/16)


    Here's what I found this week; please let me know if I missed your post!

    First--applications to be a panelist for the Cybils Awards are due Sept. 14--do consider applying!  There are more categories than Elementary/MG Spec Fic.--maybe audiobooks are your thing, or maybe you have a six year old at home and want to read all the chapter books of the past year!  Or maybe you've spent the year deep in YA spec fic--they always need good panelists who aren't afraied of a bit of reading...

    The Reviews

    Bounce, by Megan Shull, at Ms. Yingling Reads

    The Bronze Key, by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare, at Charlotte's Library

    Children of Exile, by Margaret Peterson Haddix, at Read Till Dawn

    Curse of the Boggin, by DJ MacHale, at Word Spelunking, Mother Daughter Book Reviews, and books4yourkids.com

    The Evil Wizard Smallbone, by Delia Sherman, at Kit Lit Reviews

    Furthermore, by Tahereh Mafi, at Cracking the Cover, Green Bean Teen Queen, and Owl Always Be Reading

    The Gathering, by Dan Poblocki, at Geo Librarian

    The Girl Who Drank the Moon, by Kelly Barnhill, at Waking Brain Cells

    Into the Land of the Unicorns, by Bruce Coville, at Got My Book

    The Legend of Sam Miracle, by N.D. Wilson, at Pages Unbound Reviews

    The Left-Handed Fate, by Kate Milford, at the NY Times

    The Looking Glass Wars, by Frank Beddor , at A Backwards Story

    Magic Marks the Spot, by Caroline Carlson, at The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia

    The Mighty Odds by Amy Ignatow, at Books4yourkids.com

    Monstrous, by MarcyKate Connolly, at Pages Unbound Reviews

    The Peculiar Night of the Blue Heart, by Lauren DeStefano, at A Reader of Fictions

    Riverkeep, by Martin Steward, at the NY Times Book Review (anyone read this yet?  Do you think its Middle Grade?)

    The Runaway Dolls, by Ann Martin and Laura Godwin, at Leaf's Reviews

    Song of the deep, by Brian Hastings, at Jean Little Library

    Unidentified Suburban Object, by Mike Jung, at Sonderbooks

    The Voyage to Magical North, by Claire Fayers, at Redeemed Reader

    When the Sea Turned to Silver, by Grace Lin, at Hit or Miss Books

    Wings of Fire (series), by Tui T. Sutherland, at Rachel Neumier

    Authors and Interviews

    Jennifer Weiner (The Littlest Bigfoot) at Publishers Weekly

    Giveaways

    Furthermore, by Tahereh Mafi, at Dark Fairie Tales

    Alcatraz vs. The Evil Librarians: The Dark Talent, by Brandon Sanderson, at Fantasy Book Critic and On Starships and Dragonwings

    The Hammer of Thor, by Rick Riordan, at Mother Daughter Book Reviews

    Other Good Stuff

    A Tuesday Ten of Speculative Fiction Girls at Views from the Tesseract

    A list of middle grade fantasy with black girl leads, at Book Riot

    At the Barnes and Noble Kids Blog, I have a list of animal fantasies for Warriors fans

    9/10/16

    The Bronze Key (Magisterium Book 3)


    So back in The Iron Trial (the link takes you to my review, a favorite of mine) the first book of the Magisterium series by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare, the three main characters, students together at a school for magic, are given this following cheerful (not) prophecy about themselves:  'One will die, one will fail, another is already dead.'  Cal, the main character, learned in the first two books that he is the one who is already dead, in a strange and twisted sense of having had his soul kicked out of his body in infancy, and replaced by that of the arch villain of bad magic, aka The Eater of Death, who is now dead (except of his soul, which is apparently thriving in the form of Cal, despite his reluctance to be an arch-villain himself).   Which leaves the other two bits for Tamara and Aaron, the best friends Cal could ever imagine.  In The Bronze Key (Scholastic Press, upper MG, August 30, 2016), the third book of the series, another part of the prediction is revealed (and don't go reading reviews on Goodreads, or it will be spoiled!).

    But even though Cal knows he's the one that's "already dead" he doesn't want to be killed...and unfortunately someone is hellbent on doing just that.  Tamara, Aaron, and Cal don't listen to the reassurances of the grown-ups, and try to find who is behind the attempts on Cal's life, and things go magically wrong and get worse.

    And that's it from me about the plot.

    But I can say that this was a cracking good installment in the series, and if you enjoyed the first two books, you'll read this in a single sitting!  Cal and co. are not just caught up in tangled pasts and difficult magics, but they are young teens coping with being young teens, and each of them has particular difficulties to cope with--Aaron's dad is in prison, Tamara's big sister ended up, through magical mischance, as an imprisoned fire elemental, and a fellow student has an awkward crush on Cal, and Havoc, his chaos ridden wolf pup, is in danger (and he's the soul of the Eater of Death, which doesn't build Confidence).

    The pages turn very quickly, and the ending is a whammer of terrible Feels.

    I can't wait for book 4!

    This is a series I'm happy to enthusiastically recommend to the fantasy loving 12 or 13 year old who wants the magical adventure to take center stage, and isn't interested in the romance that takes up so much time in so much (but by no means all!) YA.  Which reminds me that I should tempt my own 13 year old with it...he will like Havoc the wolf cub lots.

    9/6/16

    Release day blitz for Eden's Escape. with giveaway




    Today is the release day for Eden's Escape, by M. Tara Crowl (Disney-Hyperion, middle grade) sequel to last year's Eden's Wish.


    Eden's Wish is the story of a girl trapped inside an antique oil lamp. It might be a luxurious lamp, but it's still a prison,a dn she hates being a genie.  Then she finds a way to Earth, and becomes a regular kd at a California middle school.  But she's not safe--a former genie wants her lamp and it's power. 

    Her adventures on Earth continue in Eden's Escape:

    "Eden's new life on earth begins in New York City under the guidance of her new guardian: Pepper, a petite, bubbly genie alum who's also a Broadway actress. Before she has a chance to settle in, though, Eden is whisked away for a granting--only to find herself trapped in a laboratory. David Brightly, owner of the world's leading tech company, cares more about tapping into the lamp's power than making a wish and starts performing tests on Eden. With Brightly's plasma shield around the lamp, Eden has no way home. Left without a choice, she escapes the lab and goes on the run. After her daring exit, Eden finds herself on the streets of Paris--home to Electra's headquarters. Left in a strange city with a price on her head (courtesy of scheming Brightly), Eden has to keep her wits about her. She dons a chic disguise and flits around Paris incognito, investigating Brightly Tech. Assisted by Pepper and her old adversary Bola, as well as some new friends, Eden embarks on a quest to retrieve the lamp and protect the secrets of the genie legacy."



    I  haven't had a chance to read it yet, but I'm looking forward to it lots!


    GIVEAWAY

    The blitz wide giveaway is for a $50 Amazon or Barnes and Noble Gift Card (winner’s choice). It is open to anyone who can receive a gift card via email. The giveaway run from Sept. 6-20.

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR

    M. Tara Crowl grew up in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. She studied Cinematic Arts at the University of Southern California, then received an MA in Creative Writing at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. She lives in New York City, and you can find her here:


    9/5/16

    Girl on a Plane, by Miriam Moss

    Girl on a Plane, by Miriam Moss (HMH Books for Young Readers, September 13, 2016), is a gripping, fictionalized account of the author's own experience of being on board a hijacked plane in 1970.   It's a compelling, thought-provoking, page-turner.

    The time has come for Anna to leave her family in Bahrain to return to her English boarding school, and though she's used to the constant uprooting that comes with life in a military family, she's not used to the sadness of leaving her family.  But there's no choice--she must get on the plane that will take her away from them. 

    But then her plane is hijacked by Palestinian guerrillas, and is forced to land in the desert of Jordan.  There it sits, with its engines shut down, fiercely hot in the day, and cold at night, with inadequate supplies of food and water, and mounting (as it were) sanitation issues.  And of course, with the imminent threat of death.  Any wrong move could trigger the hijackers to kill.  Any wrong step in the negotiations outside could trigger the explosives that have been rigged up to the plane.

    Anna and her seatmates, boys also on their way back to school in England, cope as best they can, simply getting through each tedious hour, and then each tedious day as their ordeal continues.  The tension of the story bleeds through into the pages, and though its not a page turner in the "what will happen next" sense, it is utterly riveting.

    Anna comes through vividly as a character, though the supporting cast less so.  There is less human drama than one might expect; everyone, for the most part, simply endures as best they can, and it is not quite believable. This faint lack of interesting human story was disappointing, although it is Anna's story, and so stays tighltly focused on her experiences and perceptions.  Moss makes an effort to add nuance to her hijackers; though some have lost all humanity, one young man, who Anna talks with on a few occasions, come across as not entirely unsympathetic--he saw his own parents killed during the occupation of Palestine.  Though Anna can't forgive the fact that he now has the power to kill her in turn, she can't quite hate him unequivocally.  As Miriam Moss says in an author's note (which you can read on Amazon):

    "I have tried to write a nonjudgmental account of events, to show that the world is not black-anwhite, but an infinitely richer and more complex gray. I have tried to understand what drives desperate people to do desperate things, and to understand the complexities of the Middle East a little better. Those who hijacked me were homeless and disenfranchised. I hope this book might help those of us who have so much understand a little better those who have so little."

    Anna's four day ordeal is engrossing, and though it's hard for those of us who were alive back then to think of stories set in the 1970s as "historical fiction," this will be an educating eye-opener to kids today, who have grown up with the even scarier terrorism fueled by religious fanaticism that haunts us today. 

    Not one to read on a long airplane trip, but a good one to read on other, less vulnerable forms of transportation.  I read it in a single sitting on a ferry boat, and though I did speculate about what would happen if our boat were hijacked, a boat is a heck of a lot less hellish than a plane.  Especially a plane heating up in the desert when smoking on planes was still standard practice (which is perhaps what truly makes this historical fiction in a visceral way.  Everyone lights up immediately.). 

    For fans of teens in peril, this is a must read.  It's also good for those of us who like survival stories of people trapped with food running out etc., with interesting details like going through the food packets not eaten during the in-flight snack service pre-hijacking, and the hostages being taken to their luggage, and having to decide what few things to take from it.

    The one thing I would have liked more of would have been a few pages on the actual history of the hijacking.  Anna's plane was one of three out there in the desert--what happened to the other two?  Did the British government give in to the hijackers demands?  I have read that Jewish passengers were segregated from the others, and kept hostage for weeks longer, but the book doesn't mention this.  And a bit of historical background on just what was going on in the Near East in 1970 would have added value.

    disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher

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